[better-html.com](http://better-html.com)
A better HTML reporter for Mocha, forked from mocha-html-reporter
A component library for react that is as close to plane html as possible
A better html reporter for karma
better html customElements api for vue apps.
A component library for react native that is as close to plane react-native as possible
A better html reporter for teaspoon-mocha
A very fast HTML parser, generating a simplified DOM, with basic element query support.
A better library to create highly customizable PDFs from HTML or URL as buffer, base64 string and .pdf file.
JSON.parse with context information on error
JSON.parse with context information on error
The most comprehensive authentication framework for TypeScript.
better-sqlite3 with multiple-cipher encryption support
A better path.resolve() that normalizes paths on Windows
A better opn. Reuse the same tab on Chrome for 👨💻.
The fastest and simplest library for SQLite in Node.js.
List of legacy HTML named character references that don’t need a trailing semicolon
Fast and almost Gaussian blur by Mario Klingemann
Human-friendly JSON Schema validation for APIs
Telemetry package for Better Auth
Map of named character references from HTML 4
Opinionated HTML formatter focused towards making HTML diffs readable.
Advanced fetch wrapper for typescript with zod schema validations, pre-defined routes, hooks, plugins and more. Works on the browser, node (version 18+), workers, deno and bun.
The most comprehensive authentication framework for TypeScript.
Better HTML for Rails. Provides sane html helpers that make it easier to do the right thing.
Vident support for better_html. If you use better_html, you will need to install this gem too.
a better way to write html
A dashboard for MiniProfiler
Better markdown to HTML renderer.
Clean up strings (html entities, html/xml code, unnecessary whitespace, etc.) to prep them to be better searched or analyzed.
A gem to make working with Bootstrap 2.0 in Rails 3 easier and better. Includes a new bootstrapped_form replacement for form_for which gives error text handling and html formatting to match Bootstrap's syntax.
Concise is built on a set of simple but important principles that aid in effective and manageable web design. By understanding these principles, Concise can be used to it's full potential and we can create a better paradigm for using HTML and CSS to build websites.
== FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * command line utility * Not too rich in functionality * Uses the filtered html instead of the normal. not sure what the difference is but the smaller the better == SYNOPSIS: doc2html foo.doc doc2html foo.doc foo.htm == REQUIREMENTS:
Converter for complete ANSI SGR codes to HTML. Similar to ansitags gem, but smaller output (no nested spans), faster (converts everything in one pass), more flexible (init options to specify palette, line ending conversion, etc.) and better SGR code support (handles ';'-separated code-sequences, fonts, blink(!) and more than 16 colors).
FAP is a ruby gem build on top of the excellent Nokogiri, to turn boring XML, or HTML documents into yummy ruby objects. Right now, it only support using Nokogiri's XPath selectors, and simple "relations" between a document nodes, though this will hopefully get better. FAP's ideas are loosely connected to tools built by some adventurous fellas at AF83, who still do PHP things to their brains. Some credits should go to them, and to the horrid weather that kept me locked inside last week-end. And yes, I know it's a stupid name. But I'm sure you can come up with a decent acronym. :)
== DESCRIPTION: websitary (formerly known as websitiary with an extra "i") monitors webpages, rss feeds, podcasts etc. It reuses other programs (w3m, diff etc.) to do most of the actual work. By default, it works on an ASCII basis, i.e. with the output of text-based webbrowsers like w3m (or lynx, links etc.) as the output can easily be post-processed. It can also work with HTML and highlight new items. This script was originally planned as a ruby-based websec replacement. By default, this script will use w3m to dump HTML pages and then run diff over the current page and the previous backup. Some pages are better viewed with lynx or links. Downloaded documents (HTML or ASCII) can be post-processed (e.g., filtered through some ruby block that extracts elements via hpricot and the like). Please see the configuration options below to find out how to change this globally or for a single source. This user manual is also available as PDF[http://websitiary.rubyforge.org/websitary.pdf]. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * Handle webpages, rss feeds (optionally save attachments in podcasts etc.) * Compare webpages with previous backups * Display differences between the current version and the backup * Provide hooks to post-process the downloaded documents and the diff * Display a one-page report summarizing all news * Automatically open the report in your favourite web-browser * Experimental: Download webpages on defined intervalls and generate incremental diffs.
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